No, the track is too narrow for the train to run on, as O guage has a wider wheel base than OO Gauge
One can purchase a Hornby model railroad track through several specialty model train sites such as new railway modellers, model railroad, hornby, and gpj model railroad.
Yes, HO track is needed to operate an HO train.
The sparks are caused by the train burning off dust etc. from the track. The smoke is either the train overheating or a side-effect of the sparks
Hornby O Gauge would be useful in the hobby of model train collecting. They are some of the most collectable and sought after pieces on the market today often selling for å£50 to å£200.
No, you must have the same gauge track as your train is made in.
Typically around 0.6m (2 feet) for standard gauge track.
With a splitter.
Every ho scale train I have had worked on any ho scale track.
No, triang is oo gauge and will connect to ho as long as the track code is OK. But N gauge is much smaller.
Any train track in which the rails are spaced closer together than Standard Gauge, which is 56.5 inches. Common Narrow Gauge widths in North America have been: 15" Gauge 2 foot gauge 30" gauge 36" Gauge (most common in US) 42" Gauge (most common in UK commonwealths)
0n3 .. that's O scale (1:48) running on .75 in gauge track (1:48 = 1/4" = 1ft.) ... On30 runs on HO track (meaning that HO track represents 30" track in O scale)